Ann Widdecombe

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The Rt Hon Ann Widdecombe MP
Ann Widdecombe

In office
2 September 1998 – 18 September 2001
Preceded by Norman Fowler
Succeeded by Oliver Letwin

In office
2 June 1997 – 2 December 1998
Preceded by John Maples
Succeeded by Liam Fox

Home Office Minister in Charge of Prisons
In office
9 April 1992 – 2 May 1997
Prime Minister John Major
Succeeded by Office Abolished

Born 4 October 1947 (1947-10-04) (age 60)
Bath, Somerset, England
Political party Conservative
Religion Roman Catholic

Ann Noreen Widdecombe (born 4 October 1947) is a British Conservative Party politician and, more recently, television presenter and novelist. She is the Member of Parliament for Maidstone and The Weald and a Privy Counsellor. She is a prominent member of the Conservative Christian Fellowship and an outspoken supporter of traditional family values.

Contents

Born in Bath, Somerset, Widdecombe is the daughter of a minor Ministry of Defence Civil Servant. She attended the Royal Navy School, Singapore,[1] and a Convent School in Bath. She then read Latin at Birmingham University and later attended Lady Margaret Hall, Oxford to read PPE.

From 1976 to 1978, Widdecombe was a Runnymede District Councillor. She contested the seat of Burnley in 1979 and then Plymouth Devonport in 1983 against David Owen.

She was first elected to the House of Commons in the 1987 UK general election as member for the constituency of Maidstone (which became Maidstone and The Weald in 1997).

Widdecombe joined John Major's government as Parliamentary Under-Secretary of State for Social Security in 1991. After the 1992 general election, she became the Home Office Minister in Charge of Prisons, and in that role visited every single prison.

After the fall of the Conservative government to Labour in 1997 she served as shadow Health Secretary and later shadow Home Secretary under William Hague.

During the 2001 Conservative leadership election, she could not find sufficient Conservative MPs to support her as a leadership candidate. She first supported Michael Ancram, who was eliminated in the first round, and then Kenneth Clarke, who lost in the final round. She afterwards declined to serve in an Iain Duncan Smith shadow cabinet (although she indicated prior to the leadership contest that she wished to retire to the backbenches anyway).

In the 2005 leadership election, she initially supported Kenneth Clarke again. Once he was eliminated, she turned support towards Liam Fox. Following Fox's subsequent elimination, she took time to reflect before finally declaring for David Davis. She expressed reservations over the eventual winner David Cameron, feeling that he did not have a proven track record like the other candidates for leadership, and she has been a leading figure in parliamentary opposition to his A List policy which she has said is "an insult to women".[2]

In an interview with Metro in September 2006 she stated that if the parliament was of a normal length it was likely she would go at the next General Election.[3] She confirmed her intention to stand down to The Observer's Pendennis diary in September 2007.[4]

At the October 2006 Conservative Conference, she was Chief Dragon in a political version of Dragon's Den, in which A-list candidates were invited to put forward a policy proposal which was then torn apart by her team of Rachel Elnaugh, Oliver Letwin and Michael Brown.[5]

In October 2007, she announced that she would stand down from parliament at the next general election after Prime Minister Gordon Brown squashed speculation of an Autumn 2007 general election. Before her announcement, it was speculated she was considering standing once again in order to thwart any attempt to parachute someone from the A List in her constituency.[1]

Widdecombe is a committed Christian who has made it clear that her views on some issues reflect this - for instance, she would refuse to be health secretary as long as this involved overseeing abortions. Along with John Gummer MP, she changed denomination from the Church of England to the Roman Catholic Church following the decision that women could become priests.[6] She called for a zero tolerance policy of prosecution - albeit with only fines as the punishment - for users of cannabis in her speech at the 2000 Conservative conference, which was well-received by rank-and-file Conservative delegates. However, she alleges that someone connected with Francis Maude promptly contacted journalists to alert them that fellow Conservative cabinet members were prepared to come out and indicate "something of ambivalence" towards their own past experiences with this drug.[7]

On the 2007 ITV programme, An Exploration of Faith, Widdecombe again emphasised her Catholic faith, citing her ardent belief in dogma, such as transubstantiation, and also condemning secularism as the enemy of modern society.

In 2003, together with fellow Roman Catholic MP Edward Leigh, Widdecombe proposed an amendment opposing repeal of Section 28 of the Local Government Act, which banned the promotion of homosexuality. Out of the 14 Parliamentary votes considered by the Public Whip website to concern equal rights for homosexuals, Widdecombe has taken the opposing position in 12 cases, not being present at the other two votes.[8]

She is a committed animal lover and one of the few Conservative MPs to have consistently voted for the ban on fox hunting.

Widdecombe has occasionally stirred up controversy with her words and policies. When the voters of Eastbourne returned a Liberal Democrat candidate, in the by-election caused by the assassination of Ian Gow, Widdecombe told them "the IRA would be toasting their success".

She also made headlines for her policy of applying the standards for handcuffing prisoners in transit to pregnant women, even on visits to hospitals. Widdecombe claimed that this was necessary because of the risk of their absconding.

During the Conservative leadership election that picked William Hague, Widdecombe spoke out against Michael Howard, under whom she had served when he was Home Secretary. She famously remarked "there is something of the night about him". It was considered to be extremely damaging, and Howard was frequently portrayed as a vampire in satire from that time on,[9] and came last in the poll. However, he went on to become party leader in 2003, and Ann Widdecombe said "I explained fully what my objections were in 1997 and I do not retract anything I said then. But this is 2005 and we have to look to the future and not the past."[10]

Widdecombe is also known to oppose financial help from the state for older carers who have passed retirement age.[11]

Her non-political accomplishments include being a popular novelist. In 2002, she took part in the ITV programme Celebrity Fit Club. In March of 2004 she briefly became the Guardian newspaper's agony aunt, introduced with an Emma Brockes interview.[12] In 2005 BBC Two showed six episodes of The Widdecombe Project, an agony aunt television programme. In 2005, she appeared in a new series of Celebrity Fit Club, but this time as a panel member dispensing wisdom and advice to the celebrities taking part. Also in 2005, she presented a show Ann Widdecombe to the Rescue in which she acted as an agony aunt, dispensing no-nonsense advice to disputing families, couples, and others across the UK. She was also a guest host of news quiz Have I Got News for You in 2006, and hosted the programme again in November 2007, (she and Kirsty Young, are the only two women to have hosted the show more than once) when she disclosed that her cat was called Arbuthnott. Widdecombe vowed she would never appear on Have I Got News For You again after comments made by panellist Jimmy Carr during her second appearance on the programme. She wrote, "His idea of wit is a barrage of filth and the sort of humour most men grow out of in their teens ... [T]here's no amount of money for which I would go through those two recording hours again. At one stage I nearly walked out."[13]

In 2006, she launched a boycott against British Airways for suspending a worker who refused to hide her cross which ended when British Airways reversed their suspension. In November 2006, she moved into the house of an Islington Labour Councillor to experience life on a council estate, her response to her experience being "Five years ago I made a speech in the House of Commons about the forgotten decents. I have spent the last week on estates in the Islington area finding out that they are still forgotten".[14]

She awarded the 2007 University Challenge trophy. In the same year, she was cast as herself in The Sound of Drums, the 12th episode of the third series of the science-fiction drama Doctor Who supporting Mr Saxon, the alias of the Master.[15]

In 2007, Widdecombe fronted a television series called Ann Widdecombe Versus, on ITV1, in which she speaks to various people about things related to her as an MP, with an emphasis on confronting those responsible for problems she wished to tackle. On 15 August 2007 she talked about prostitution, the next week, about benefits and the week after that, about truancy.

In September 2007, The Observer reported that she had made her first advertisement, for the Rana Pasta Company.[4]

  • An Act of Peace by Ann Widdecombe (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2005) ISBN 0-297-82958-0
  • Father Figure by Ann Widdecombe (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2005) ISBN 0-297-82962-9
  • An Act of Treachery by Ann Widdecombe (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2002) ISBN 0-297-64573-0
  • The Clematis Tree by Ann Widdecombe (Weidenfeld & Nicolson, 2000) ISBN 0-297-64572-2
  • Ann Widdecombe: Right from the Beginning by Nicholas Kochan (Politico's Publishing, 2000) ISBN 1-902301-55-2
  • Inspired and Outspoken: The Collected Speeches of Ann Widdecombe edited by John Simmons (Politico's Publishing, 1999) ISBN 1-902301-22-6

Parliament of the United Kingdom
Preceded by
John Wells
Member of Parliament for Maidstone
19871997
Succeeded by
(constituency abolished)
Preceded by
(new constituency)
Member of Parliament for
Maidstone and The Weald

1997 – present
Incumbent
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